remains after an acid has given up a proton
Conjugate acid
Remains after an acid has given up a proton.
the conjugate acid/base of an acid-base pair
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
The conjugate base of an acid is the species we get from from deprotonating it (the conjugate base is usually an anion). If we deprotonate hypobromous acid, HBrO, we can see that the hypobromite ion (BrO-) is the conjugate base. HBrO---> H+ + BrO-
Conjugate acid
Conjugate acid
Remains after an acid has given up a proton.
the conjugate acid/base of an acid-base pair
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
The conjugate base of an acid is the species we get from from deprotonating it (the conjugate base is usually an anion). If we deprotonate hypobromous acid, HBrO, we can see that the hypobromite ion (BrO-) is the conjugate base. HBrO---> H+ + BrO-
The conjugate acid of F- is HF.
Such a chemical species is called a conjugate base.
HNO2 conjugate acid = one more hydrogen conjugate base = one less hydrogen
The conjugate acid is the acetic acid, CH3COOH.
The conjugate base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
The conjugate acid of H2O is H3O+